The Bridge-Street Burelars. The deputation froni the Town Hall meeting to ask for the. respite of Montgomery; ' and Williams, .the Bndge-.street burglars, waited on the Preniiar on Monday. The members of th^ depatation, which was introduced by Mi-. Dowel, M.L.A., were, His Eminence, Cardinal Moran, Aldermen S. E. Lees, ILL. A., ?M. Simmons, T. Jessep, David Davis, /X»T ii i x *~» m t^ ^-*t . p i wooiianra;, \i. x. nerry, ^jsiayor oi North Sydney), G. E. Rnssel Jones, (Bnrwood), Messrs. J. C- Watson (president ot the Trades and Labor Conncil). J. Kain, S. T. 'NVhiddon, Lee, W. D. O'Connor, R. D. Meagher D. O'Connor, O'Sullivan, M.L.A., Kelly, M.L.A., and Hoyle, M.L.A. Mr. Dowel said they represented not. less tlian 25,000 people who had signed petition, and he believed, voiced the -wishes of the great majority of the people. They did not wish a re-trial of the case or abolition of capital punishment or in any way to interfere with the effica cious administration of the law. He believ...

Somk Liverpool (Eng.) boys played a mean trick on an old deaf and dumb nraaii-jKrinder the other day. They took o&amp;t the. cylinder, and lie went abontf the strvetsi stopping at every doorjand grinding away like steam. xie, was ^surprised ar one amount ne had j taken; everybody contributed libeially. And he noticed that he wasihfc ordered off once, nor was one bulldog set on him. He had never seen the people in kucTi good hnmor, and didn't know why it was nntil m the evening when lie opened his mapbino. to oil it and drive in a few .lonMf notes here and there. But in stead of getting -wngry and rising up all his dumb vocabulary, he. took the faint, and now lie goes round grinding his organ, and is doiiip more business tbau all - the other wholesale music merchants on the banks of the Mersey.

FOR LASSITUDE, TORPIDITY, SOUR STOMACH, INDIGESTION, HEADAGUE, BACKACHE, &amp;c., Take a couple of Fletcher's Pills every second night ; they are a sure andnrampt cure, and give certain FLETCHERS PTLLS are a quick, sure, and reliabie remedy for all com plaints arising from torpid liver, in digestion, weak stomach, and impur ities of the blood. They are pre pared on rational and sensible lines, and. do not. contain a particle of calo mel, gamboge, or any drastic pur gative, bnt. operate by perfectly nat-aral means, by stimulating the liver and increasing the flow of bile and tli us producing easy evacuations and l.atural oatnarseH wicnouc cue annoyance mid pain of griping and pureing. Beware of the many harmful sub stitutes on sale in many, shops. None are genuine unless they bear the signature of 1-\ Moore Clements on the outside wrapper. CLEMENTS' TONIC and FLETCHER'S PILLS have become tsucb household words that imitations are frequently offered. We contend that this imitation ...

STBA iVBERBY OULTITEE IN N AEEO W BEDS. Where it is desired to produce from a small, area the very largest product of berries the narrow bed plan is the best. It may be styled the 'intensive1 plan of berry;growinjr. The soil where the beds are to be made should be deeply brokep with fork or plough, incor porating with it, at the same time, a goud amty-JjL ? iMf-mnlil, decaying leaves or : or eight iu«li iflankg-to fptni^.tne™D8al^J^B» taoplankB on edge and keep'tiiem in place 1 by strong slabs dnyea in deeply, first on one side and then on the other. However good the variety may be, and however good the DIVVUIUBUUV auu ^licparauuu ui uu: auu uno been, if dronth is allowed to work its evil influence just prior to and during the bear ing season an abundbut crop of large, well flavored bbrries cannot be obtained. But in fe humerona localities where irrigation is not HklHy^&amp;other means must be resorted to ^^^^HBlMBBlrbf moisture during tiie ^^^^|^MhD|ia plunk border ^^^^^^^Bf^H^...

Notabilities. in theBermucuio. ? ?--.''' ' -/^-- -?-... Prof. Garner is in Washington. Just the place for him to finish off his' African studies of monkey business. Sunday mornings the German, emperor goes reverently to the Dotn Kirohe ani Sun day evenings to the opera. xne rmnce ox* waies us xn constant oreau of being trampled beneath the feet of a crowd, and he raiely appears in public exoept in a carriage which afford? some protection. The ex-President of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons of England Bays public drinking troughs for horses are' a curse to horseflesh, a* they spread farcy and glanders. Lord Rosebery onoe introduced a bill to substitute an elective senate for the bouse of lords. He is said to be heartily in favor of removing the veto power of the lords. The visiting card of the . German emperor la XOUX n.*'''** w uugo .w) xu± yiuuuu^ mui* ?.'* gentlemen, aud on it is engraved ? Wilhelu^ Dbutscher KxJser und Eoenig von Preuasen,' n»HMMy^^^^^^oleridge of Englan...

«EA8OS.iSBIiE WEEO^KILIiEWS1?' The weed question resolves itself into ft few distinct points, attention to whioh will «ave a world of wasted toil. In the firet place » farmer must find .out hpw to do the work at' wholesale. Maponl labor can never cope with, such a ' herculean task. We must find some way lo kill by the acre, and to do this suc cessfully we must get' firm hold of the first have reaped one crop, of which a third iy»W weeds, deliberately start' in the fall to plough under all the ripe seeds whioh were shed by that, weed crop. That seed is simply em balmed when thus buried under a few inches of soil, and though a portion may decay, enough will remain sound to supply a heavy growth the next time they are brought near the surface, where air. and moisture aud warmth combined are sure to cause free ger mination ; and after that buried seed has »up plied two or three years' weeds from the one year's crop of weeds, there wilt still remain enough to keep up the supply. Old land...

SPRING FJ5EDING. When bees hive stored enomrii to last until flow^Miiia^t isadecidediniury to ^T'1- -*^'S!iS^-iw-7 hy feeding. It rrtiality of tew verJIHJ^g Thioh uses up the water during chilly; Tneieii.-thwr. oy, pttj for perish. The quieter colonies can oe''Kep^i« * » ? . ,r _ . ? ? ' ? t ? a.1 ? yi i»« early spring me more populous inuy wjii uo during fruit Woom. It is the op nion of experienced bee-keepers1 that sprang feeding should only be resorted to to prevent starva tion. . ? . ? Wiinn St. ia n(w.p_sqaTTr to feed/bees the best ?way is to quietly -slip in combs of sealed honey near the cluster. When this is want ing, combs can be filled with syrup. 'When the comb is filled v.it can be put near the uluBter ; the intention should be to convey the food to them.in euoh a way as to let the heat escape from the cluster as little as possible. .. ' ., : : ; ;

FEEDING EYE MEAL. Pollen stored in hives is known by the name of bee-bread and is indispensable to the nourishment of young bees while in the larval state. It is rich in nitrogenous sub stances which are not contained in honey, and without whioh ample nourishment could not be furnished for the development of the growing bee. . When bees cannot find pollen' in parly spring they wUl gather floufor meal, and even saw dust, as a substitute. It is now known that rye meal isprefeiredas a substi tute for pollen by the bees. It is now a oommon practice wherever bee-keepi™ is extensively carried on to supply the bees parly in the season with this article. Shallo w troughs or boxes are set not far from the apiaries filled about two inches deep with nnely-ground, dry, unbolted rye meal, oat meal or -5ven with unbolted flour. The boxes jnust be placed in H warm sp.tf sheltered from tie wind. As soon as pollen

[?] mm : ^T- -- ? 1. ' ????; : ^Wf making teail^aj in a ^?i up to the preseit has 1^^ little notice fi-on the ^Jlic. We refer t- the p« of the White Tank. ^^M party have done s large |||. rk and appear to be in |§3 9 pet compensate! for ga They have Mink 135 ^ ?e now three djffsrent mi ic dtive* lhe 4oa.c ia ML there is a possibility fgti nei»i reeta are olose to W-. iey may shortly|'roake I P sized reef. At jfreseut PJ nahtyof the stoineare #it payn hie results: may pi expected. Some!;, stone jwj evious to our yisijb con ^, j uliow of gold. : nf£ yards west of Deuts P d osmopolitati, owned by p™ )utty, is situated. ? Thig 'i»Mnt Jlne to Dentcber's, Us m of '(''til- Three shafts pajlut. down on this cJniin, &amp;'m of which in 90 \Joet, fg»ig token from the 30 r- ;TB'd will also be laised f^w^P01' wofkingH shoiily. |'Bi (lii« daiui prosplete ?0^«iH which no gold Wh lalidMtnislied while we were .ridjeld of which was very a,m Tlle lv«f varies in *$Mm i to 18 inches, and ^?tbin abo...